BPF (eBPF) is an independent instruction set architecture which is
introduced in Linux a few years ago. Originally, eBPF execute
environment was only inside Linux kernel. However, recent years there
are some user space implementation (https://github.com/iovisor/ubpf,
https://doc.dpdk.org/guides/prog_guide/bpf_lib.html) and kernel space
implementation for FreeBSD is going on
(https://github.com/YutaroHayakawa/generic-ebpf).
The BPF target support can be enabled using WITH_LLVM_TARGET_BPF, as it
is not built by default.
Submitted by: Yutaro Hayakawa <yhayakawa3720@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: dim, bdrewery
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16033
This should have been done as part of r336019 -- including ${SRCTOP}/sys is
not a good business model for something that's build in legacy/bootstrap
stages.
Beyond that, libnv seems to build quite alright as legacy, part of
buildworld, and standalone without. Axe it.
Reported by: truckman (head building stable/11)
Tested by: Shawn Webb (HardenedBSD)
MFC after: 3 days
These were found by the Undefined Behavious GsoC project at NetBSD:
Avoid undefined behavior in ftok(3)
Do not change the signedness bit with a left shift operation.
Cast to unsigned integer to prevent this.
ftok.c:56:10, left shift of 123456789 by 24 places cannot be represented
in type 'int'
ftok.c:56:10, left shift of 4160 by 24 places cannot be represented in
type 'int'
Avoid undefined behavior in an inet_addr.c
Do not change the signedness bit with a left shift operation.
Cast to unsigned integer to prevent this.
inet_addr.c:218:20, left shift of 131 by 24 places cannot be represented
in type 'int'
Detected with micro-UBSan in the user mode.
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 2 weeks
- File names don't necessarily need to be repeated
- Add SPDX tags
- Add a missing copyright for Kyle Kneitinger in bectl.8, originally written
by him in GSoC 2017; his standard copyright notice has been copied from
other files within the same directory to remain consistent with how he
clearly wished to portray it
This makes the be_exists behavior match the comments that assert that we've
already checked that the dataset derived from the BE name is set to mount at
/.
Other changes of note:
- bectl_list sees another change; changing mountpoint based on mount status
turns out to be a bad idea, so instead make the mounted property of the
returned nvlist the path that it's mounted at
- Always return the "mountpoint" property in "mountpoint" if it's ste
Loader is still relied upon at the beginning of libbe to specify the be
root, but we can derive from that the primary zpool and any vdevs that we
need to set nextboot bits on.
This lets me successfully `bectl activate -t test`, but UEFI loader doesn't
quite yet understand so it's effectively defunct.
be_get_dataset_snapshots has been added to libbe(3), effectively returning
the same information as be_get_bootenv_props but for snapshots of the given
dataset. The assumption is that one will have the BE dataset name before
wanting to grab snapshots.
This also accomplishes the following:
- Proxy through zfs_nicenum as be_nicenum, because it looks better than
humanize_number and would presumably be useful to other libbe consumers.
- Rename be_get_snapshot_props to be_get_dataset_props, make it more useful
Contrary to the removed comment, the kernel does appear to use the timezone
argument of settimeofday. The comment dates to the BSD4.4 import; I assume it
is just stale.
The lib32 build was already building the i386 version of
the clang sanitizers (libclang_rt) but they were not being
installed. This enables the installation.
MK_TOOLCHAIN=no was originally added to the install make
environment to disable includes so that NO_INCS could be
removed. The MK_TOOLCHAIN in bsd.incs.mk was subsequently
renamed to MK_INCLUDES, but bsd.lib.mk doesn't even include
bsd.incs.mk when LIBRARIES_ONLY is defined which the install
make environment for compat libs now defines. However,
setting MK_TOOLCHAIN=no forced MK_CLANG=no which disabled
libclang_rt during the install32 phase. Remove MK_TOOLCHAIN=no
since LIBRARIES_ONLY is now sufficient.
Since the libcompat environment overrides both LIBDIR and
SHLIBDIR, libclang_rt/Makefile.inc has to set both variables
to force the libraries to be installed to the location
expected by the compiler.
Reviewed by: bdrewery, dim
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16574
Move definitions from cpuregs.h into the cca.h, and include cca.h into vm.h.
This is required to make MIPS MD memattr definitions usable in userspace.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation, Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15583
The timespecadd(3) family of macros were imported from NetBSD back in
r35029. However, they were initially guarded by #ifdef _KERNEL. In the
meantime, we have grown at least 28 syscalls that use timespecs in some
way, leading many programs both inside and outside of the base system to
redefine those macros. It's better just to make the definitions public.
Our kernel currently defines two-argument versions of timespecadd and
timespecsub. NetBSD, OpenBSD, and FreeDesktop.org's libbsd, however, define
three-argument versions. Solaris also defines a three-argument version, but
only in its kernel. This revision changes our definition to match the
common three-argument version.
Bump _FreeBSD_version due to the breaking KPI change.
Discussed with: cem, jilles, ian, bde
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14725
Along with some pending upstream changes, this will allow raising the WARNS
level.
Reviewed by: cem, aniketp
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16486
Rendering of execle was missing a comma between the NULL argument and envp.
For unclear reasons, POSIX' definition of these routines comments out the
mandatory trailing NULL argument. That seems unnecessary and probably
(reasonably) confuses mdoc.
For unclear reasons, POSIX' definition of these routines spells NULL as
"(char *)0." This is needlessly unclear. One guess might be that POSIX
targets more exotic computer architectures than FreeBSD does. Fortunately,
there is no such problem on any reasonable platform for FreeBSD to support.
Spell NULL as NULL.
The comma was probably removed in r117204 while the comment and creative
spelling of NULL were added in r116537 (both 15 years ago).
r336773 removed all things xscale. However, some things xscale are
really armv5. Revert that entirely. A more modest removal will follow.
Noticed by: andrew@
The OLD XSCALE stuff hasn't been useful in a while. The original
committer (cognet@) was the only one that had boards for it. He's
blessed this removal. Newer XSCALE (GUMSTIX) is for hardware that's
quite old. After discussion on arm@, it was clear there was no support
for keeping it.
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16313
If a timer is updated (re-added) with a different time period
(specified in the .data field of the kevent), the new time period has
no effect; the timer will not expire until the original time has
elapsed. This violates the documented behavior as the kqueue(2) man
page says (in part) "Re-adding an existing event will modify the
parameters of the original event, and not result in a duplicate
entry."
This modification, adapted from a patch submitted by cem@ to PR214987,
fixes the kqueue system to allow updating a timer entry. The
kevent timer behavior is changed to:
* When a timer is re-added, update the timer parameters to and
re-start the timer using the new parameters.
* Allow updating both active and already expired timers.
* When the timer has already expired, dequeue any undelivered events
and clear the count of expirations.
All of these changes address the original PR and also bring the
FreeBSD and macOS kevent timer behaviors into agreement.
A few other changes were made along the way:
* Update the kqueue(2) man page to reflect the new timer behavior.
* Fix man page style issues in kqueue(2) diagnosed by igor.
* Update the timer libkqueue system test to test for the updated
timer behavior.
* Fix the (test) libkqueue common.h file so that it includes
config.h which defines various HAVE_* feature defines, before the
#if tests for such variables in common.h. This enables the use of
the actual err(3) family of functions.
* Fix the usages of the err(3) functions in the tests for incorrect
type of variables. Those were formerly undiagnosed due to the
disablement of the err(3) functions (see previous bullet point).
PR: 214987
Reported by: Brian Wellington <bwelling@xbill.org>
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 week
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15778
data from /etc/passwd rather than /etc/master.passwd.
The libc getpwent(3) and related functions automatically read master.passwd
when run by root, or passwd when run by a non-root user. When run by non-
root, getpwent() copes with the missing data by setting the corresponding
fields in the passwd struct to known values (zeroes for numbers, or a
pointer to an empty string for literals). When libutil's pw_scan(3) was
used to parse a line without the root-accessible data, it was leaving
garbage in the corresponding fields.
These changes rename the static pw_init() function used by getpwent() and
friends to __pw_initpwd(), and move it into pw_scan.c so that common init
code can be shared between libc and libutil. pw_scan(3) now calls
__pw_initpwd() before __pw_scan(), just like the getpwent() family does, so
that reading an arbitrary passwd file in either format and parsing it with
pw_scan(3) returns the same results as getpwent(3) would.
This also adds a new pw_initpwd(3) function to libutil, so that code which
creates passwd structs from scratch in some manner that doesn't involve
pw_scan() can initialize the struct to the values expected by lots of
existing code, which doesn't expect to encounter NULL pointers or garbage
values in some fields.
SPE ABI uses the soft-float ABI, which splits doubles into two words. As such,
fabs(3) cannot work on a double directly. It's too costly to convert the
argument pair into a single double to use efdabs, so clear the top bit of the
high word, which is the sign bit.
At a bare minimum, this function will return 0 if a BE is mounted at the
given path or non-zero otherwise. If the optional 'details' nvlist is
supplied, it is filled with an nvpair containing just the information about
the BE mounted at the path. This nvpair is structured just as it is for
be_get_bootenv_props, except limited to just the single mount point.
Based on the idea that we shouldn't have all-new library and utility going
into base that need WARNS=1...
- Decent amount of constification
- Lots of parentheses
- Minor other nits
For the moment, this is a primitive nvlist dump of what we get back from
be_get_bootenv_props as a proof-of-concept and to make sure that we're
getting back the kind of information we want to see from list.
This makes us more resilient to a rename of the bootfs, but still wouldn't
withstand pool renames or guid renames. More importantly, this allows `bectl
create <foo>` work out of the box to create a boot environment based on the
currently booted one.
- Rename 'active' to 'rootfs', which is used in other places to describe the
currently booted (or about to be booted) BE.
- Add 'bootfs', which indicates the next boot environment to be booted. This
is pulled from the BOOTFS zpool property.
- Go ahead and keep an open handle to the active zpool. We might need to
enumerate datasets, get properties, and set properties (e.g. bootfs)
throughout other libbe bits, and a single handle isn't overly expensive.
All supported FreeBSD build host versions have backtrace.h, so we can
just eliminate that test. For futimes() we can test the compiler's
built-in __FreeBSD__ major version rather than relying on including
osreldate.h. This should reduce the frequency with which Clang gets
rebuilt when building world.
Reviewed by: dim
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
of NaNs before possible returning a NaN.
The remquo*() and remainder*() functions should now give bitwise identical
results across arches and implementations, and bitwise consistent results
(with lower precisions having truncated mantissas) across precisions. x86
already had consistency across amd64 and i386 and precisions by using the
i387 consistently and normally not using the C versions. Inconsistencies
for C reqmquol() were first detected on sparc64.
Remove double second clearing of the sign bit and extra blank lines.
remainder*(x, y) and remquo*(x, y, quo) were broken for y = 0 by changing
multiplication by y to addition of y. (When y is 0, the result should be
NaN but became 1 for finite x.)
Use a new macro nan_mix_op() to give more control over the mixing, and
expand comments.
Recent re-testing missed finding this bug since I only tested the macro
version on amd64 and i386 and these arches don't use the C versions (they
use either asm versions or builtins).
Reported by: enh via freebsd-numerics
they use same passphrase and keyfiles.
Unique salt will be randomly generated for each provider to ensure the
Master Key for each is unique.
This change follows on from r335673 and r336602, which allowed multiple
providers to be attached in a single command.
Reviewed by: asomers
Approved by: sobomax
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16115
o The correct value for _JB_SIGMASK is 27.
o The storage size for double-precision floating
point register is 8 bytes.
Submitted by: "James Clarke" <jrtc4@cam.ac.uk>
Reviewed by: markj@
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16344
Now that multiple providers can be attached at once, exit codes and
error messages must be handled correctly if there are failures in on
any of the providers.
Reported by: asomers (Kyua test failures via continuous integration)
Reviewed by: asomers
Approved by: allanjude
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16386
The is required because libpcap.so depends on the libraries when OFED
is enabled.
Reviewed by: bdrewery, hselasky
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16230
This is a follow-up to r336299.
* lib/msun/Makefile:
. Remove polevll.c
* lib/msun/ld80/e_powl.c:
. Copy contents of polevll.c to here. This is the only consumer of
these functions. Make functions 'static inline'.
. Make reducl a 'static inline' function.
* lib/msun/man/exp.3:
. Remove BUGS section that no longer applies.
* lib/msun/src/math_private.h:
. Remove prototypes of __p1evll() and __polevll()
* lib/msun/src/s_cpow.c:
* lib/msun/src/s_cpowf.c:
* lib/msun/src/s_cpowl.c
. Include math_private.h.
. Use the CMPLX macro from either C99 or math_private.h (depends on
compiler support) instead of the problematic use of complex I.
Submitted by: Steve Kargl <sgk@troutmask.apl.washington.edu>
PR: 229876
MFC after: 1 week
This was open-coded in range reduction for trig and exp functions. Now
there are 3 static inline functions rnint[fl]() that replace open-coded
expressions, and type-generic irint() and i64rint() macros that hide the
complications for efficiently using non-generic irint() and irintl()
functions and casts.
Special details:
ld128/e_rem_pio2l.h needs to use i64rint() since it needs a 46-bit integer
result. Everything else only needs a (less than) 32-bit integer result so
uses irint().
Float and double cases now use float_t and double_t locally instead of
STRICT_ASSIGN() to avoid bugs in extra precision.
On amd64, inline asm is now only used for irint() on long doubles. The SSE
asm for irint() on amd64 only existed because the ifdef tangles made the
correct method of simply casting to int for this case non-obvious.
are finialized after r336539, so do not do it.
Submitted by: David CARLIER <devnexen gmail com>
MFC after: 1 month (after r336539)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16059
copied_key and copied_salt are assigned with NULL and never used
otherwise. Remove the two variables and related code.
Reviewed by: pfg
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16314
cc1: warnings being treated as errors
/usr/src/lib/msun/src/s_cpow.c: In function 'cpow':
/usr/src/lib/msun/src/s_cpow.c:63: warning: implicit declaration of function 'CMPLX'
This is a follow-up to r336299.
* lib/msun/Makefile:
. Remove polevll.c
* lib/msun/ld80/e_powl.c:
. Copy contents of polevll.c to here. This is the only consumer of
these functions. Make functions 'static inline'.
. Make reducl a 'static inline' function.
* lib/msun/man/exp.3:
. Remove BUGS section that no longer applies.
* lib/msun/src/math_private.h:
. Remove prototypes of __p1evll() and __polevll()
* lib/msun/src/s_cpow.c:
* lib/msun/src/s_cpowf.c:
* lib/msun/src/s_cpowl.c
. Use the CMPLX macro from either C99 or math_private.h (depends of
compiler support) instead of the problematic use of complex I.
Submitted by: Steve Kargl <sgk@troutmask.apl.washington.edu>
PR: 229876
MFC after: 1 week
with 1 huge component and 1 tiny (but nowhere near denormal) component.
Rescale earlier so that a scale factor of 2 can be combined with a non-
scale divisor of 2, so that the division doesn't shift out a bit. In the
usual case where the scale factor is just 1, the division may shift out a
bit, but then the underflow is not spurious and the inaccuracies are harder
to fix.
Remove the STDC CX_LIMITED_RANGE pragma and its verbose comment. We still
don't have any C99 compilers (that support fenv pragmas), and if we did
then there are thousands of other places in libm that would need to use
them more than here.
The other cleanups are smaller.
and csqrtl().
When one component is huge and the other is tiny, scaling down the tiny
component gave spurious underflow.
When both components are denormal, not scaling them up gave inaccuracies
of 34+ ulps on not very carefully selected args. Fixing this reduces the
maximum error to 1.6 ulps on the same set of args (mosly not denormal ones).
The scaling used multiplication of a complex variable by 2, but clang messes
this on amd64 up by losing the sign of -0.0. Calculate the components
separately, as is well known to be needed for operations on more exceptional
values.
independent of the precision in most cases. This is mainly to simplify
checking for errors. r176266 did this for e_pow[f].c using a less
refined expression that often didn't work. r176276 fixes an error in
the log message for r176266. The main refinement is to always expand
to long double precision. See old log messages (especially these 2)
and the comment on the macro for more general details.
Specific details:
- using nan_mix() consistently for the new and old pow*() functions was
the only thing needed to make my consistency test for powl() vs pow()
pass on amd64.
- catrig[fl].c already had all the refinements, but open-coded.
- e_atan2[fl].c, e_fmod[fl].c and s_remquo[fl] only had primitive NaN
mixing.
- e_hypot[fl].c already had a different refined version of r176266. Refine
this further. nan_mix() is not directly usable here since we want to
clear the sign bit.
- e_remainder[f].c already had an earlier version of r176266.
- s_ccosh[f].c,/s_csinh[f].c already had a version equivalent to r176266.
Refine this further. nan_mix() is not directly usable here since the
expression has to handle some non-NaN cases.
- s_csqrt.[fl]: the mixing was special and mostly wrong. Partially fix the
special version.
- s_ctanh[f].c already had a version of r176266.
Use tools/build/Makefile to install the headers into ${WORLDTMP}/legacy
instead. Compared to r336026 this has the minor advantage that it avoids
unncessary header installation when building the non-bootstrap libnv.
Reviewed By: bdrewery, kevans
Approved By: brooks (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16187
This corresponds to the latest status (hasn't changed in 9+
years) from openbsd of ld80/ld128 powl, and source cpowf, cpow,
cpowl (the complex power functions for float complex, double
complex, and long double complex) which are required for C99
compliance and were missing from FreeBSD. Also required for
some numerical codes using complex numbered Hamiltonians.
Thanks to jhb for tracking down the issue with making
weak_reference compile on powerpc.
When asked to review, bde said "I don't like it" - but
provided no actionable feedback or superior implementations.
Discussed with: jhb
Submitted by: jmd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15919
The issue found with gcc6 build (originally on illumos, confirmed on FreeBSD).
Mark it __unused.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13109
len % 1 is always true. Fix StrHexToBytes to do a proper odd length
check. This was only called by DevPathFromTextGenericPath,
ConvertFromTextVendor and DevPathFromTextMAC, which we've not had
a need to actually use just yet.
Submitted by: David Binderman
PR: 229718
Remove numactl(1), edit numa(4) to bring it some closer to reality,
provide libc ABI shims for old NUMA syscalls.
Noted and reviewed by: brooks (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16142
No valid FreeBSD binary very called them (they would call lchown and
msync directly) and we haven't supported NetBSD binaries in ages.
This is a respin of r335983 with a workaround for the ancient BFD linker
in the libc stubs.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16193
RB_ASKNAME is no longer instructions to the boot loader to request a
prompt for which kernel to boot. Instead, it asks for what the root
file system to use. RB_INITNAME is unused, and never has been in
FreeBSD as far as I can tell. Remove it from the documentation and fix
comment. RB_SELFTEST and RB_MINIROOT likewise (though they were
completely undocumented). These last three constants can likely just
be deleted as nothing references them (even to set useless bits).
RB_ASKNAME doesn't actually survive reboot, however, so needs to be
communicated to the bootloader via other means. If the bootloader sets
it, though, it will be honored.
The double compilation of the kernel sources in libmd and libcrypt is
baffling, but add yet another define hack to prevent duplicate symbols.
Add documentation and SHA2-224 test cases to libmd.
Integrate with the md5(1) command, document, and add more test cases;
self-tests pass.
Detected on NetBSD:
# nm /usr/lib/libc.so|grep sanit
/public/src.git/lib/libc/citrus/modules/citrus_mapper_std.c:173:8:
runtime error: left shift of 1 by 31 places cannot be represented in type 'int'
Obtained from: NetBSD (CVS Rev. 1.11)
MFC after: 1 week
Remove unnecessary casts, use integer literal constants instead of
floating point constants where possible, and introduce three const
static variables to hold 0.5, 0.25, and 1/3.
PR: 229420
Submitted by: Steve Kargl <sgk@troutmask.apl.washington.edu>
MFC after: 1 week
r336019 introduced ${SRCTOP}/sys to the include paths in order to pull in a
new sys/{c,}nv.h. This is wrong, because the build tree's ABI isn't
guaranteed to match what's running on the host system.
Fix instead by removing -I${SRCTOP}/sys and installing the libnv headers
with `make -C lib/libnv includes`... this may or may not get re-worked in
the future so that a userland lib isn't installing includes from sys/.
Reported by: bdrewery
quatactl(2) mechanism. (Read-only at this point, however.)
In particular, this is to allow rpc.rquotad query quotas
for NFS mounts, allowing users to see their quotas on the
hosts using the datasets.
The changes specifically:
* Add new RPC entry points for querying quotas.
* Changes the library routines to allow non-UFS quotas.
* Changes rquotad to check for quotas on mounted filesystems,
rather than being limited to entries in /etc/fstab
* Lastly, adds a VFS entry-point for ZFS to query quotas.
Note that this makes one unavoidable behavioural change: if quotas
are enabled, then they can be queried, as opposed to the current
method of checking for quotas being specified in fstab. (With
ZFS, if there are user or group quotas, they're used, always.)
Reviewed by: delphij, mav
Approved by: mav
Sponsored by: iXsystems Inc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15886
No valid FreeBSD binary ever called them (they would call lchown and
msync directly) and we haven't supported NetBSD binaries in ages.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15814
Replace size_t members with ksize_t (uint64_t) and pointer members
(never used as pointers in userspace, but instead as unique
idenitifiers) with kvaddr_t (uint64_t). This makes the structs
identical between 32-bit and 64-bit ABIs.
On 64-bit bit systems, the ABI is maintained. On 32-bit systems,
this is an ABI breaking change. The ABI of most of these structs
was previously broken in r315662. This also imposes a small API
change on userspace consumers who must handle kernel pointers
becoming virtual addresses.
PR: 228301 (exp-run by antoine)
Reviewed by: jtl, kib, rwatson (various versions)
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15386
Some applications, notably PostgreSQL, want to call setproctitle()
very often. It's slow. Provide an alternative cheap way of updating
process titles without making any syscalls, instead requiring other
processes (top, ps etc) to do a bit more work to retrieve the data.
This uses a pre-existing code path inherited from ancient BSD, which
always did it that way.
Submitted by: Thomas Munro
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16111
sockstat(1), ugidfw(8)
These are the last of the jail-aware userland utilities that didn't work
with names.
PR: 229266
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: D16047
- Move CSRG IDs into __SCCSID().
- When a file has been copied, consistently use 'From: <tag>' for strings
referencing the version of the source file copied from in the license
block comment.
- Some of the 'From:' tags were using $FreeBSD$ that was being expanded on
each checkout. Fix those to hardcode the FreeBSD tag from the file that
was copied at the time of the copy.
- When multiple strings are present list them in "chronological" order,
so CSRG (__SCCSID) before FreeBSD (__FBSDID). If a file came from
OtherBSD and contains a CSRG ID from the OtherBSD file, use the order
CSRG -> OtherBSD -> FreeBSD.
Reviewed by: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15831
This is in preparation for changes to update the various ID strings in
libc's source. CSRG ID strings will use __SCCSID() and there are some
existing uses of __RCSID() for NetBSD ID strings already. These are
generally under either an explicit #if 0 or an #ifdef LIBC_SCCS so are
off by default and this change preserves that existing behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15830
The issue was caused by header pollution brought by GCC 8.1.
We now have to remove include-fixed headers in the GCC installation
directory.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Pointed out by: jhb